Sujet : Re: Are 'we' too negative?
De : noway (at) *nospam* nochance.com (JAB)
Groupes : comp.sys.ibm.pc.games.actionDate : 08. Sep 2024, 11:04:41
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Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <vbjsrp$1sn7j$1@dont-email.me>
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On 07/09/2024 16:30, Dimensional Traveler wrote:
When I did my O and A levels in the UK many years ago the system was based around your score vs. the score of everyone else who sat the exam. So, can't remember the exact numbers but it was something like the top 5% got an A, the next 15% a B, then the largest portion was C, and that was considered average, and the then D and E were the opposite of B and A.
>
"Grading on the curve." Used by some college/university teachers in the US as well. Known to be inaccurate because a 30-100 student class is NOT going to have the same distribution of "smart" as a population of millions. As is pointed out by many students. Teachers defense of that system usually boils down to "Life isn't fair, this reflects the way employers will treat you so get used to being screwed."
This was done nationally so you are literally talking about thousands upon thousands of sixteen/eighteen year olds sitting an exams. Being in a class with either all the worst or all the best wasn't going to change the grade you got.